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CHS approves $3bn Spiritwood nitrogen plant

  • Spanish Market: Fertilizers, Natural gas
  • 05/09/14

CHS will proceed with construction of a proposed nitrogen fertilizer plant in Spiritwood, North Dakota, and plans for the facility to be operational in the first half of 2018.

The plant will produce more than 2,400 st/day (876,000 st/yr) gross ammonia which will be upgraded to urea, UAN and diesel exhaust fluid (DEF). The farmer-owned cooperative plans on primarily serving agricultural retailers within a 200-mile radius, including the Dakotas and parts of Minnesota, Montana and Canada.

CHS estimates the cost of the project at $3bn, up from initial projections of $1.5bn-2bn. The rise in capital expenditure caused the company to put the project on hold in April. CHS attributed the higher-than-expected cost to increased construction costs, likely owing to labor constraints in a state that has seen a boom in oil/gas shale development.

"Because of the size and scale of this investment, we needed to take the additional time to review costs and reassess areas where we could make modifications," CHS chief executive Carl Casale said. "We are now fully prepared to proceed with an investment that will add tremendous value to our member-owners, and further expand our global crop nutrients business platform."

Final plans for the project were approved by CHS' board of directors this week. Groundbreaking will take place after additional details are ironed out, CHS said.

CHS said it will be the lone investor for the project, which it called the "single largest private investment project ever undertaken in North Dakota." CHS is awaiting approval of its application for a $1bn Advanced Fossil Energy loan from the US Department of Energy. The company said the application is still in the first phase of review.

The plant will be served by the new 95-mile (153km) Wind Ridge natural gas pipeline built by WBI Energy.

Spiritwood is the second planned North Dakota urea plant to be approved. Dakota Gasification is currently building a $402mn, 1,100 st/day urea (401,500 st/yr) plant at its existing Great Plains Synfuels Plant in Beulah, North Dakota, that already produces 400,000 st/yr ammonia and 105,000 st/yr ammonium sulfate. Urea production is expected to begin in early 2017.

bh/dcb

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29/08/24

UK eyes new environmental guidance for oil, gas: Update

UK eyes new environmental guidance for oil, gas: Update

Adds comment from Shell London, 29 August (Argus) — The UK government will develop new environmental guidance for oil and gas firms, in the light of a recent Supreme Court decision that ruled consent for an oil development was unlawful, as the scope 3 emissions — those from burning the oil produced — were not considered. The ruling means that "end use emissions from the burning of extracted hydrocarbons need to be assessed", the government said today. The government will consult on the new guidance and aims to conclude the process "by spring 2025", it said today. It will in the meantime halt and defer the assessment of any environmental statements related to oil and gas extraction and storage activities until the new guidance is in place, including statements that are already being assessed. The Supreme Court in June ruled that Surrey County Council's decision to permit an oil development was "unlawful because the end use atmospheric emissions from burning the extracted oil were not assessed as part of the environmental impact assessment". The government also confirmed that it will not challenge judicial reviews brought against the development consent granted to the Jackdaw and Rosebank oil and gas fields in the North Sea. A judicial review in the UK is a challenge to the way in which a decision has been made by a public body, focusing on the procedures followed rather than the conclusion reached. Environmental campaign groups Greenpeace and Uplift launched legal challenges in December seeking a judicial review of the government's decision to permit Rosebank. Norway's state-owned Equinor and London-listed Ithaca hold 80pc and 20pc of Rosebank, respectively. Greenpeace in July 2022 separately filed a legal challenge against the permitting of Shell's Jackdaw field. "This litigation does not mean the licences for Jackdaw and Rosebank have been withdrawn", the government said. The Labour government, voted into office in July , pledged not to issue any new oil, gas or coal licences, but also promised not to revoke existing ones. Equinor is "currently assessing the implications of today's announcement and will maintain close collaboration with all relevant stakeholders to advance the project. Rosebank is a vital project for the UK and is bringing benefits in terms of investment, job creation and energy security", the company told Argus today. Shell is "carefully considering the implications of today's announcement... we believe the Jackdaw field remains an important development for the UK, providing fuel to heat 1.4mn homes and supporting energy security, as other older gas fields reach the end of production", the company told Argus . North Sea oil and gas production "will be a key component of the UK energy landscape for decades to come", the government said today. The UK government introduced a climate compatibility checkpoint in September 2022, designed to ensure that oil and gas licensing fits UK climate goals. The UK has a legally-binding target of net zero emissions by 2050. The checkpoint, though, does not take into account scope 3 emissions. These typically make up between 80pc and 95pc of total oil and gas company emissions. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Greek regulator approves 2025 gas tariff increases


29/08/24
29/08/24

Greek regulator approves 2025 gas tariff increases

London, 29 August (Argus) — Greek energy regulator RAEWW has approved 2025 gas transmission tariffs previously proposed by transmission system operator Desfa, with some alterations. The annual tariff for entry to the Greek grid is set at roughly €0.35/MWh for 2025, around 4pc higher than in 2024 (see data & download) . Exit tariffs at domestic and international points will be €0.59/MWh, a nearly 21pc increase on the year, while the LNG regasification tariff is set at €0.30/MWh, nearly 35pc higher than in 2024. Before annual capacity auctions in July, Desfa had proposed some differentiation in entry and exit tariffs for different interconnection points, but RAEWW has instead opted for equalising entry and exit fees regardless of the point. Multipliers for shorter-term capacities are set at around 1.38 for quarterly products, 1.48 for monthly products and 2.97 for daily products. These are the same multipliers which have been used for the past two years. RAEWW set the allowed revenue for transmission services at €149.2mn. A much larger portion of the allowed revenue will come from exit points, at around €90.5mn compared with €58.7mn at entry points. The regulator set an allowed revenue of €23.6mn for LNG services. It noted the Revithoussa LNG terminal has consistently exceeded its allowances since 2019, peaking at 312pc in 2023 as use of the terminal soared. RAEWW has also opened a public consultation on proposed changes to the rulebook of Greece's Henex exchange, which would create a new "trading-only" type of participant. The new category of participant does not need to be a registered user of the transmission system, but must have concluded a contract with exclusively one other participant who is registered, and guarantee that it will fulfil its obligations arising from any concluded trades. If the registered system user loses its registered status, then the trading-only participant also does. Any termination of contract between the two parties must immediately be reported to Henex. Interested parties can email responses to the consultation to RAEWW until 20 September. By Brendan A'Hearn Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

UK plans new environmental guidance for oil and gas


29/08/24
29/08/24

UK plans new environmental guidance for oil and gas

London, 29 August (Argus) — The UK government will develop new environmental guidance for oil and gas firms, in the light of a recent Supreme Court decision that ruled consent for an oil development was unlawful, as the scope 3 emissions — those from burning the oil produced — were not considered. The ruling means that "end use emissions from the burning of extracted hydrocarbons need to be assessed", the government said today. The government will consult on the new guidance and aims to conclude the process "by spring 2025", it said today. It will in the meantime halt and defer the assessment of any environmental statements related to oil and gas extraction and storage activities until the new guidance is in place, including statements that are already being assessed. The Supreme Court in June ruled that Surrey County Council's decision to permit an oil development was "unlawful because the end use atmospheric emissions from burning the extracted oil were not assessed as part of the environmental impact assessment". The government also confirmed that it will not challenge judicial reviews brought against the development consent granted to the Jackdaw and Rosebank oil and gas fields in the North Sea. A judicial review in the UK is a challenge to the way in which a decision has been made by a public body, focusing on the procedures followed rather than the conclusion reached. Environmental campaign groups Greenpeace and Uplift launched legal challenges in December seeking a judicial review of the government's decision to permit Rosebank. Norway's state-owned Equinor and London-listed Ithaca hold 80pc and 20pc of Rosebank, respectively. Greenpeace in July 2022 separately filed a legal challenge against the permitting of Shell's Jackdaw field. "This litigation does not mean the licences for Jackdaw and Rosebank have been withdrawn", the government said. The Labour government, voted into office in July , pledged not to issue any new oil, gas or coal licences, but also promised not to revoke existing ones. Equinor is "currently assessing the implications of today's announcement and will maintain close collaboration with all relevant stakeholders to advance the project. Rosebank is a vital project for the UK and is bringing benefits in terms of investment, job creation and energy security", the company told Argus today. North Sea oil and gas production "will be a key component of the UK energy landscape for decades to come", the government said today. Argus has also contacted Shell for comment. The UK government introduced a climate compatibility checkpoint in September 2022, designed to ensure that oil and gas licensing fits UK climate goals. The UK has a legally-binding target of net zero emissions by 2050. The checkpoint, though, does not take into account scope 3 emissions. These typically make up between 80pc and 95pc of total oil and gas company emissions. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Ethiopia’s EABC seeks DAP in tender


29/08/24
29/08/24

Ethiopia’s EABC seeks DAP in tender

London, 29 August (Argus) — Ethiopian Agricultural Businesses (EABC) has likely issued a tender to buy 360,000t of DAP, closing on 9 September. Sources expect EABC to issue further tenders to bring the total volume of phosphate-containing fertilizers sought to 800,000-1.36mn t for delivery in 2024-25. But it is uncertain if additional tenders will also be for DAP or for NPS/NPSB. Typically, the corporation seeks large amounts of NPS and NPSB in its annual large-scale tender, and Moroccan major fertilizer producer OCP is awarded the full volume. In its 2023 tender — issued in August — EABC requested a little over 1.02mn t of NPSB and 332,300t of NPS, as well as 980,000t of urea. But reports emerged earlier this week that EABC was preparing to seek DAP instead. By Tom Hampson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Qatar's Muntajat raises September sulphur price


29/08/24
29/08/24

Qatar's Muntajat raises September sulphur price

London, 29 August (Argus) — Qatar's state-owned sulphur producer and marketer Muntajat/Qatar Energy has raised the Qatar Sulphur Price (QSP) for September to $125/t fob Ras Laffan/Mesaieed. This is up by $19/t on its August QSP set at $106/t fob after spot prices rose. The latest spot tenders from Qatar and Kuwait have attracted several bids at $120s/t fob from trading firms. This follows a substantial rise of $25/t from July to August, when the latest round of price increases in the spot market started to filter through, as phosphate fertilizer prices firmed and some supply curbs limited output from the usual producers. The latest adjustment for September implies delivered pricing to China of $151-157/t cfr at current freight rates, which were last assessed on 22 August at $26-28/t to south China and at $30-32/t to Chinese river ports for a shipment of 30,000-35,000t. But with China cfr assessments at $134-139/t cfr on 22 August, delivered prices were below the implied range in the previous round of business, as buyers opted to wait and see what was the outlook for fertilizer exports prior to booking more raw material imports. By Maria Mosquera Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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